When Trudeau goes to Tofino, this syilx woman goes to her meme garden | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Cloudy  7.5°C

Kamloops News

When Trudeau goes to Tofino, this syilx woman goes to her meme garden

syilx "meme garden" creator capq'wicya — also known as Alexa Manuel, says that humour helps her deal with hard times and maddening headlines.
Image Credit: SUBMITTED

When the world’s feeling heavy and she needs a laugh, syilx literature student capq'wicya — also known as Alexa Manuel — adds another meme to the meme garden she started on Instagram in 2017. 

Manuel fills her digital “syilx meme garden” with a mix of cheeky messages and images of seasonal flowers and plants.

It’s about taking power from harm, she says. 

“That’s how we’ve dealt with things since the dawn of time,” adds Manuel, whose syilx roots are from spax?mn (Upper Nicola Indian Band). “It’s just the best way to heal ourselves.”

capq'wicya is a graduate student at the University of British Columbia, in the English Literature program. Her most recent memes take shots at Thanksgiving and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 

“May our land be full of thanks, and giving land back,” reads a meme she published on Oct. 9. 

And on Oct. 3, she published a meme that says: “If you say ‘reconciliation’ in the mirror five times Justin Trudeau doesn’t appear at all because he’s on vacation,” — in response to the prime minister’s decision to spend Canada’s first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation (Sept. 30) vacationing with his family in Tofino, instead of attending in-person events held to honour survivors and their families. 

Image Credit: INSTAGRAM

Manuel’s “Pumpkin Spiced Land Back” meme caught the attention of many on social media in 2020. Photo from Manuel’s Instagram.

“I can’t picture going through things and not trying to laugh about it in some way,” she says, adding that she takes comfort not only in creating stories, but in listening to them as well.

capitkwl [syilx oral storytelling laws] are “thousands and thousands of years old,” she says. “So we’ve been laughing like this for thousands of years — since time immemorial.”

“Our stories are so important, and not just our captikwl stories, [but] also our histories and also like the histories of our families, of our people and being in the community … like, how my grandparents met.”

Image Credit: INSTAGRAM

Playing the part of the “little burr”

In syilx teachings, every person is given a name for a reason.

Manuel’s name capq'wicya was gifted to her by her grandmother — and it actually refers to a plant you might run into when you’re walking through the bush, she says. 

“There’s like those little burrs that get stuck on your socks,” she says.

“She named me that because when I was little I was really small and delicate, sensitive, but also I was really clingy to my mom and I wouldn’t let her go anywhere without me.”

Image Credit: INSTAGRAM

As time shifts so do names, according to syilx teachings, and Manuel says that she’s recently found new meaning in the name her grandmother gifted her. 

“The more I talked to people they were just like you have this like really nice side to you, but you also have this like really big truth-telling side that’s kind of painful sometimes,” she says. “It’s a little bit sharp, but … necessary.”

— This story was originally published by The Discourse and IndigiNews.

News from © iNFOnews, 2021
iNFOnews

  • Popular kelowna News
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile